@oriond@lemmy.ml to Asklemmy@lemmy.ml • 11 months agoWhat is the most destroying command you can type in the Linux terminal?message-square142fedilinkarrow-up1164arrow-down19
arrow-up1155arrow-down1message-squareWhat is the most destroying command you can type in the Linux terminal?@oriond@lemmy.ml to Asklemmy@lemmy.ml • 11 months agomessage-square142fedilink
minus-square@Dehydrated@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink27•11 months agoProbably dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda or whatever your system volume is
minus-square@gens@programming.devlinkfedilink15•11 months agoPosible to recover data, use /dev/urandom.
minus-squareNatanaellinkfedilink6•11 months agoOnly on very old hard disks, on newer disks there’s no difference between overwrite patterns
minus-square@gorysubparbagel@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink3•11 months agoWith wear levelling on SSDs you may be able to recover some of the data
minus-square@grabyourmotherskeys@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink1•11 months agoI did have RH Linux die while updating core libs a very long time ago. It deleted them and the system shut down. No reboot possible. I eventually (like later that day) copied a set of libs from another rh system and was able to boot and recover. Never used rh by choice again after that.
Probably dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda or whatever your system volume is
Posible to recover data, use /dev/urandom.
Only on very old hard disks, on newer disks there’s no difference between overwrite patterns
With wear levelling on SSDs you may be able to recover some of the data
I did have RH Linux die while updating core libs a very long time ago. It deleted them and the system shut down. No reboot possible. I eventually (like later that day) copied a set of libs from another rh system and was able to boot and recover.
Never used rh by choice again after that.
deleted by creator